Tag: desktop

Sometimes people ask why do I use MacOSX as my main work platform (isn’t that something to do with beliefs?). My answer is “good foundation with great user interface”. Though that can be treated as “he must like unix kernel and look&feel!”, it is not exactly that.

What I like is that I can have good graphical stable environment with some mandatory tools (yes, I used OS-supplied browser, mail, etc), but beside that maintain the bleeding edge open-source space (provided by MacPorts).

Also what I like, is OS-supplied development and performance tools. DTrace included is awesome, yes, but Apple did put some special touch on it too. This is visualization environment for dtrace probes and other profiling/debugging tools:

Even the web browser (well, I upgraded to Safari4.0 ;-) provides some impressive debugging and profiling capabilities:

Of course, I end up running plethora of virtual machines (switching from Parallels to VirtualBox lately), but even got a KDE/Aqua build (for kcachegrind mostly). I don’t really need Windows apps, and I can run ‘Linux’ ones natively on MacOSX, and I can run MacOSX ones on MacOSX.

All that on single machine, running for three years, without too much clutter, and nearly zero effort to make it all work. Thats what I want from desktop operating system – extreme productivity without too much tinkering.

And if anyone blames me that I’m using non-open-source software, my reply is very simple – my work output is open-sourced.

I couldn’t resist to rework the famous phrase to portray 100 process per user limit in MacOSX. One would ask why would you ever want to run 100 programs. You don’t – it’s enough that every running Dashboard widget is a process. Every terminal window has multiple processes attached, of course, every application running (and they hide safely in dock even without windows). There’re as well various OS helper applications. At the moment when I type, there’re like 90 processes running on my system, and I’m not even doing any development work. There is a solution for that, hidden in operating system internals, but what should regular user do?

It complained that locale “” did not exist, so I couldn’t have my street name spelled correctly.

Ah, sure, it crashed several times, it’s 2.0 experimental Mac Intel build, so I guess it must do that, in order to show how difficult QA is. :)

So I opened simple text editor and tried to do it from there. I failed too, because didn’t understand how to transform simple text files into rotated envelope print. It was either rescaled or simply wrong somewhere else. That counts as failure too. I tried to do that from TextMate too, but it didn’t like my tries either.

So I searched the web for hints. It wasn’t a real search, because first title of first hit did tell me exactly what to do: Address Book. The solution is simple, select recipient, print. Sometimes I still am too power-oriented :)

Ten years ago a printer was bought in our household. It was HP DeskJet 520, black and white mod, and did cost a fortune – over $1000. It was a good one, 300dpi, and was used for 8 years. I used to clean it’s parts with alcohol, used vacuum cleaner several times as well. It may be still there, printing and making lots of noise.

So, it’s cost scared me so much that I got hpdeskjetphobia, I always avoided buying printers. I did see various printing facilities, e.g. a printing room in a bank, where transaction logs were printed on paper by large Kyoceras. Those noisy bastards were all around but not near me. In my previous job printers were outsourced from a company, and nearest one was five or six rooms away. Those were big and looked expensive. All printers looked to me expensive.

Now I decided I need one for my home office. I just went to a nearest shop, and the first one (HP PSC 1510) looked like the one I need. It even has scanner and copying functions! All for 100Eur. I took it home, opened the box, surprise surprise, it had CD for my Mac, with OCR software and some image management tool. All for 100 Eur. I don’t know how much I’ll have to pay for ink yet, but there was some included. For same 100 Eur.

I printed several photos on A4 photopaper and those looked amazing. Sure, now I need a digital camera. There is a story, why I have none yet. See, 8 years ago I was kind of early adopter. I did lots of photo footage for my school’s homepage with a camera, that did cost $1000 and had 640×480 resolution (borrowed, not own one). But I guess I have yet another phobia to kill and find out that now digital cameras are commodity as well. Maybe some pictures will end up in Wikimedia Commons? :)